Victimology Questions and Answers

2231 Words5 Pages

1. What four broad questions does general victimology raise?

Four broad questions raised by general victimology includes; defining the victim of a crime and the type of crime placed against them or application of said definition. Are they a victim of another person or of the environment? For example, was the victim walking down the street and a stranger came up and snatched their purse. This would be the victim of a crime. Whereas, if it rained for three days straight and an individual was killed after being swept away by flood waters they would be a victim of the environment. A victim may also be a victim of oneself through the act of suicide, or of technology if a local coal company pollutes the area water and they die from drinking said polluted water (Doerner & Lab, 2012).

Once we have determined who is a victim and how that determination is applicable to them we must determine the victim reaction after the crime. Will they seek help and report the crime? How will they react to the community’s response? The latter which leads to the fourth broad question of general victimology which is how society will, in turn, react to the victim after the crime (Doerner & Lab, 2012).

References

Doerner, W.G. & Lab, S.P. (2012). Victimology. 6th ed. Burlington, MA:Anderson Publishing

2. Explain von Hentig’s victim typology

Hans von Hentig was a criminologist who wanted to find the “key ingredient” as to what made a victim of crime a victim (Doerner & Lab, 2012). He believed that the victim contributed perhaps not actively but to some degree to becoming a victim of a crime. In this determination he created a typology, a list of characteristics from social context to biological and psychological factors that would predispose a person to becoming a victim of crime. Those included the young, being female, elderly, immigrants and minorities, someone who is depressed or lonely, mentally incapacitated, greedy, and the promiscuous (Dodson, 2001).

This typology poses a bit of disenchantment, per se, in that it puts the blame on the victim to a particular degree. While this may not have been von Hentig’s intention, his typology creates a just world fallacy wherein someone believes if they do not fall into any of these categories than nothing bad should ever befall them (Mallicoat & Ireland, 2014. Or, as previously states, society blames the victim for having placed themselves in harm’s way and somehow deserve the fallout.

Open Document